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The sea-breeze circulation

The sea-breeze circulation. Part I: Development w/o Earth rotation. Mesoscale features in Florida animation. Horizontal convective rolls over land Sea-breeze front penetrations on all coasts Thunderstorm outflows “ Lake shadow ” downwind of Lake Okeechobee Interactions among features.

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The sea-breeze circulation

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  1. The sea-breeze circulation Part I: Development w/o Earth rotation

  2. Mesoscale features in Florida animation • Horizontal convective rolls over land • Sea-breeze front penetrations on all coasts • Thunderstorm outflows • “Lake shadow” downwind of Lake Okeechobee • Interactions among features

  3. Lightning frequency(flashes/sq. km/year)

  4. Top left: Cross-shore flow w/ no mean flow. Bottom left: buoyancy for same case. Right: displacements over several hours.

  5. How is a sea breeze formed?First, look at a generic circulation forced by temperature differences

  6. Pressure

  7. Pressure

  8. Pressure

  9. Pressure

  10. Pressure Same mass of water would only be 18.5 feet deep

  11. Temperature affects thickness

  12. Temperature affects thickness

  13. Temperature differences make pressure differences

  14. Temperature differences make pressure differences

  15. Pressure differences make winds

  16. Pressure differences make winds Sea-breeze is not this deep…

  17. Ahrens’ text Textbook description: circulation starts from top down

  18. Is that how it really works?

  19. dtdm < input_sbf_norolls.txt &experiment casename = 'sbf.noroll.nowind.nonanel', $ &grid_run timend = 9000., plot = 300., $ &surface_flux ishflux = 1, tdelt = 12., icoast = 90, cdh = 7.2e-3, irand = 0, $

  20. DTDM simulation t=0 h t=2.5 h Vertical profile of  over land

  21. Making that plot ga-> set lev 0 4 ga-> set vrange 298 314 ga-> set t 1 ga-> set x 210 ga-> d th ga-> draw xlab potential temperature ga-> draw ylab height (km) ga-> set t 7 ga-> d th ga-> set t 13 [etc…]

  22. Perturbation potential temperature (colored); cross-shore horizontal velocity (contour) coastline scripts/sbf_devel.gs scripts/sbf_devel_movie.gs

  23. The horizontal wind isn’t blowing from land to sea first…

  24. Onshore flow always stronger; Vertical scale grows with mixed layer

  25. Animation

  26. Perturbation pressure (colored); cross-shore horizontal velocity (contour) scripts/sbf_devel2.gs scripts/sbf_devel_movie2.gs

  27. Animation

  28. Pressure perturbation 5 km inland H t=50 min L t=5 min L at surface; local H above, decreasing farther aloft

  29. Analysis where At the rigid surface dw/dt = 0, therefore B > 0 for the heated surface, therefore perturbation pressure increases with height

  30. Analysis, continued Why low perturbation pressure at surface? -- Far above heated surface, atmosphere undisturbed, thus ’ ~ 0 there -- If ’ increases with height and approaches zero, surface ’ must be negative

  31. Analysis, continued Why low perturbation pressure at surface? Another (essentially similar) view… -- Hydrostatic eqn before & after pert analysis -- Note this implies dw/dt = 0 everywhere -- ’ = 0 at model top, all (initial) ’ > 0, so vertical gradient > 0 thus L at surface needed -- neither explanation tells us why local H pressure above the heated layer…

  32. Why does’ overshoot 0, creating perturbation H pressure at z ~ 1 km? • Solve an example 1D version of anelastic ’ equation [demonstrated soon] • Invoke mass continuity in anelastic limit H L

  33. Anelastic continuity equation Traditional form Integrate over a 2D column -- depth from z=0 to z=Z. But… …since rigid top and surface, w(z=0) = w(z=Z) = 0, so this term vanishes

  34. Anelastic constraint Left with… Indefinite integration yields… If onshore winds are produced in a column, compensating offshore winds must also exist This requires an offshore directed PGF to exist aloft since onshore flow generated near surface

  35. Result of anelastic constraint Recall mean density decreases w/ height

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